Find your Oklahoma legislator.
Join the coalition here https://oksurvivorjusticecoalition.org/
There are 2 capitol dates we hope to see you at. RSVP here and learn more.
Find your Oklahoma legislator.
Join the coalition here https://oksurvivorjusticecoalition.org/
There are 2 capitol dates we hope to see you at. RSVP here and learn more.
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Film Screening and Panel Discussion on Women’s Incarceration in OklahomaIncarceration rates for women have increased 800% across the nation. In #Oklahoma alone, the number of women locked away in prisons has increased more than 17-fold, from 176 in 1978 to 3,114 in 2017. We continue to lead the nation in female incarceration, only second to Idaho, and this devastating phenomenon has caught the attention of the world.
Join us in a private screening of the film Women in Prison: America’s Forgotten Voices by French film studio StudioFact Rights documenting the mass incarceration of women in Oklahoma.Afterwards we will be joined by Kris Steele, the Executive Director of TEEM, Colleen McCarty, the Executive Director of Oklahoma Appleseed Center for Law and Justice, and Tondalao Hall, an advocate for reform and formerly incarcerated individual.
The program Poetic Justice is showcased in this documentary. April Wilkens was a part of that program last year, but is not featured. Colleen McCarty of Oklahoma Appleseed Center for Law and Justice is on the panel. McCarty is the co-host of the Panic Button podcast, whose first season told the ongoing story of April Wilkens.
The comments on this post talk about what happened at the December 2022 Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board meeting. This is a huge win for all criminalized survivors in Oklahoma!
As reported earlier this month by VNN, District attorney Steve Kunzweiler, who worked under Tim Harris (see this for why that is a problem), had his office protest April Wilkens’s 2022 parole in a letter. It is, at least partially, why she did not get a parole hearing.
It states that Kunzweiler’s office “believes the sentence imposed by the jury more than 20 years ago is appropriate, Wilkens is still a risk to the public, and Wilkens should not be granted parole for another 17 years” due to the fact that, if she were sentenced today with the same thing, she would not be eligible for parole until she had served 85% of her Life sentence.
However, we would like to note that, if she were tried again today, she likely wouldn’t even get a life sentence for what she did. Another woman, just a year after April killed Terry Carlton, claimed Battered Woman Syndrome too in killing her husband while he slept, got four years and THEN had her conviction overturned.
April’s was the first case in OK to use Battered Woman Syndrome (BWS) as a defense, so there was no precedent when she used it. What’s more, Tim Harris claimed she “cried r-pe” and convinced the jury that April didn’t suffer from BWS, despite Lynda Driskell, a BWS expert, diagnosing her with it (though Driskell was not used during April’s unjust trial).
What is more, the jury WANTED April to have parole options by now, otherwise she would have been sentenced to Life without Parole. Thus, the DA saying that she shouldn’t be allowed parole undermines what the jury even wanted for April. Why would they have given her the possibility of parole if they wanted it withheld even longer? What would the jury say now, if they knew this was how she was being treated? The jury was not given the option of convicting April of manslaughter, which carries a minimum sentence of four years, or of any offense less than first-degree murder, which carries a minimum sentence of life in prison. The evidence was not sufficient to sustain a first-degree murder conviction, however. The OK Court of Criminal Appeals had previously ruled that juries must be given the option to convict first-degree murder defendants of lesser included offenses such as manslaughter when the evidence warrants, which did not happen at April’s trial. Other defendants’ convictions were overturned by the OCCA for this error, but not April’s. It is extremely rare for any court to fail to adhere to its own precedent, and OCCA Judge Gary Lumpkin remarked in a footnote in the order denying April’s appeal that he disagreed with the OCCA’s failure in April’s case to follow its own precedent.
So why is April still incarcerated?
All of this is backed up with evidence found linked in our timeline.
Pdf copy of the letter. PDF copy of the DA protest letter
This post has been updated after its published date.